4.5
A huge thank you to NetGalley, Charlesbridge Teen, and Teri Terry for the opportunity to read Contagion in exchange for an honest review.
This is a fast-paced start to the thrilling Dark Matter trilogy about a mysteriously quick-spreading epidemic.
Set in Scotland, this book follows two perspectives: Callie and Shay.
In Callie’s perspectives, we see that she is merely a number, one of many experiments. From the way it is told, it sounds like she is a ghost following around the laboratory workers, trying to reclaim her memory and find out just what happened to her. But what can she do if she is a ghost? She cannot go through walls, like one might think with a ghost, so she has to travel through hallways and doors just like any person. Perhaps finding her family will help her figure things out, but some memories are too torturous to revisit. Callie is a rather vengeful ghost in her hunt for Dr. 1.
Shay finds a missing person flyer, and she recognizes the girl and the date. It’s Callie, but she last saw the girl getting into a car over a year ago. Even though it’s been so long, her photographic memory spikes, and she knows she needs to tell someone about what she has seen. Shay meets Kai, Callie’s brother, and together they investigate what may have happened to Callie. When the local detectives turn out to be a little less than helpful, the two take matters into their own hands. And of course, there is an almost immediate attraction to each other that starts off very fun and flirtatious.
After an underground explosion being covered up by the media, a disease begins to spread across the country. With the fast-spreading Aberdeen Flu, people are swiftly quarantined. Kai soon finds out he is immune, and Shay survives when there is an extremely low survival rate. And apparently, any survivors are found to be missing or have killed themselves. Shay can understand why as she is able to talk to ghosts, conveniently becoming friends with the deceased Callie. As she learns what surviving the flu means, Shay also discovers some newfound abilities, such as mind manipulation. No wonder there are some government soldiers (are they really?) trying to find and kill Shay!
Together, Shay, Callie, and Kai aim to put the pieces together and discover the origin of the disease, how it spreads, and through that, hopefully, a way to stop it before it leaves the British Isles and devastates the planet.
I love Terry’s writing style. It’s easy, fast, fun, and well-done. The structure of the novel was interesting but somewhat confusing at times. It alternates between Shay and Callie, and sometimes the chapters are exceedingly short. It made the two voices sound too similar at times and I would forget which character perspective I was reading. The book is paced in parts, and in Part One there is a time stamp of hours that I never quite understood what it was leading down to…the explosion, perhaps? I devoured this book, but the end didn’t quite leave me with the right feeling. It felt as if it needed just a tad more, to end in the lab where everything began. Now that would be an interesting cliffhanger! But nope!
Anyway…
For a YA audience, I find the plot and characters just right! Overall, a quick, fun read that was rather hard to put down, and I am eager for the second one!